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Where do investors look when JGBs and USTs are no longer reliable?
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Asian buyers driving callable SSA market have resurfaced in public benchmark deals
Public sector issuers have become more flexible when executing cross-currency interest rate swaps
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  • Investors are clawing for paper in the corporate bond market this week, but even before the promise of European Central Bank intervention this was a perfectly attractive asset class.
  • It’s April, so that means it’s time to start talking about 10 year Bund yields turning negative again.
  • The US Securities and Exchange Commission has a chance to examine its conscience over plans to curb derivatives use. It should do so after the industry condemned a sweeping approach that revealed little comprehension of the many sensible interactions that exist between derivatives and everyday capital markets.
  • Europe’s private debt market is growing, as companies seek funding diversity and longer maturities than offered by bank loans. GlobalCapital estimates there was €45bn of issuance of private debt to institutional investors last year.
  • Even from a distance last week's Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) paper on corporate bond market liquidity in the years following the crisis smelled funny. Unfortunately, the closer you got the bigger the pong.
  • Developments, or the lack thereof, in finalising the Markets in Financial Instruments Directive II, don’t reflect well on European institutions’ abilities to work together.